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Apr 1, 2018 β€’ 42 tweets β€’ 7 min read β€’ Read on X
π™°πš—πš, 𝚘𝚏 πšŒπš˜πšžπš›πšœπšŽ, 𝚊 πš•πšŠπš—πšπšžπšŠπšπšŽ πš’πšœ πš—πš˜πš πš–πšŽπš›πšŽπš•πš’ 𝚊 πš‹πš˜πšπš’ 𝚘𝚏 πšŸπš˜πšŒπšŠπš‹πšžπš•πšŠπš›πš’ πš˜πš› 𝚊 𝚜𝚎𝚝 𝚘𝚏 πšπš›πšŠπš–πš–πšŠπšπš’πšŒπšŠπš• πš›πšžπš•πšŽπšœ. π™Έπš πš’πšœ 𝚊 πšπš•πšŠπšœπš‘ 𝚘𝚏 πšπš‘πšŽ πš‘πšžπš–πšŠπš— πšœπš™πš’πš›πš’πš, πšπš‘πšŽ πš–πšŽπšŠπš—πšœ πš‹πš’ πš πš‘πš’πšŒπš‘ πšπš‘πšŽ πšœπš˜πšžπš•
𝚘𝚏 πšŽπšŠπšŒπš‘ πš™πšŠπš›πšπš’πšŒπšžπš•πšŠπš› πšŒπšžπš•πšπšžπš›πšŽ πš›πšŽπšŠπšŒπš‘πšŽπšœ πš’πš—πšπš˜ πšπš‘πšŽ πš–πšŠπšπšŽπš›πš’πšŠπš• πš πš˜πš›πš•πš. π™΄πšŸπšŽπš›πš’ πš•πšŠπš—πšπšžπšŠπšπšŽ πš’πšœ πšŠπš— πš˜πš•πš πšπš›πš˜πš πšπš‘ πšπš˜πš›πšŽπšœπš 𝚘𝚏 πšπš‘πšŽ πš–πš’πš—πš, 𝚊 πš πšŠπšπšŽπš›πšœπš‘πšŽπš 𝚘𝚏 πšπš‘πš˜πšžπšπš‘πš, πšŠπš— πšŽπš—πšπš’πš›πšŽ
πšŽπšŒπš˜πšœπš’πšœπšπšŽπš– 𝚘𝚏 πšœπš™πš’πš›πš’πšπšžπšŠπš• πš™πš˜πšœπšœπš’πš‹πš’πš•πš’πšπš’πšŽπšœ." - πš†πšŠπšπšŽ π™³πšŠπšŸπš’πšœ
Welcome to the VERNACULAR HOME, a @nomadreadings #crafttalk. Before we begin, I ask that if you are following along, that you engage these ideas by sharing them, faving, RTing, and chiming in with your own comments.
This talk is dedicated to all displaced peoples and all people who engage in creating a home of language on the page.
1. We’ve witnessed in recent years how advertisers have co-opted vernacular made popular by Black communities on this very platform and profited from it.
2. What these advertisers know is what any good poet knows: vernacular is the pathway to transformation. It is your first language β€” that language before you were aware of language. It is β€œlike a howl, or a shout or a machine-gun or the wind or a wave,” K. Braithwaite writes.
3. Sidenote: Transformation has a cost but cannot be bought.
4. And as this scene from Spike Lee’s Malcolm X reminds , English is an inherently oppressive and racist language. As Malcolm X feels through this new insight into our language β€” a β€œcon” as we’re told β€” he transforms and viewers are transformed with him.
5. Perfect segue to the next point…
6. If the poem does not transform (itself or the reader) it is not a poem. I repeat: If the work does not transform, what you have are words on a page β€” not a poem.
7. Let's now establish what vernacular [poetry] is.
8. Vernacular is a term used to express the idea that all languages are equal. It eliminates hierarchies of dialects vs. language.
As Baldwin writes in an essay I will share more of later, β€œ...language functions as β€˜a political instrument, means, and proof of power,’ and only politics separates a language from dialect.” (from the introduction by ed. Dohra Ahmed, Rotten English) bit.ly/2pXfk3h
9. Now that we’ve established what vernacular is, please don’t tell me you speak only one language...
10. Your dreams are a vernacular. Nature is a vernacular. Your sneaker collection is a vernacular! Signage: a vernacular. Your unique way of looking at the world: a vernacular. Your heartbeat: a vernacular. Breath: same, a vernacular.
Whenever I teach this material, I end up yelling β€œEVERYTHING IS VERNACULAR” by the end of every class. So get ready.
11. Building on that (pun intended), vernacular is also the synthesis between the language (words and symbols in any language) we choose, and how we construct it with grammar, punctuation, syntax and form.
12. It is inaccurate to say we are "decolonizing" a language. What we are doing is reclaiming it by colonizing it with our own vernaculars and inventing what it has failed to imagine. It is a language that has failed to imagine 𝘜𝘚. And so this craft talk is also a call
A call to pay attention to where this language has become dull, stale, and boring. A call to pay attention to intentional and unintentional connotations. And to undo those connotations. In undoing them, I ask that we create radical solutions for this language that troubles us.
13. β€œIt was during the anti colonial struggles of the twentieth century that the latent political potential of vernacular literature fully emerged.
14. Our resistance is in the refusal to assimilate, the preservation of our native vernaculars, the creativity in that preservation.
It is in understanding that there is a particular language [they] want [us] to know -- that particular language that is taught in schools, and the rules or codes implied in that agreed upon language and resisting those implications or overturning those agreements.
15. June Jordan said, β€œGood poetry & successful revolution change our lives, & you cannot compose a good poem or wage a revolution without changing consciousnessβ€”unless you attack the language that you share with your enemies & invent a language that you share with your allies.”
Now, with these ideas in mind, let’s go into the texts…
Harryette Mullen, "We Are Not Responsible," "Elliptical" and "Denigration" from Sleeping with the Dictionary

Image
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Note the attention to language, the transformation or awareness brought to the everyday humdrum of signage and those aforementioned 𝓬𝓸𝓷𝓷𝓸𝓽π“ͺ𝓽𝓲𝓸𝓷𝓼.

Note the attention to punctuation. Each poem uses exactly one form of punctuation in a very distinct way.
I will leave the joy of those discoveries to you! We have more to read...
Here, this breathtaking excerpt by @yosuheirhammad from β€œbreak (clear)”, breaking poems Image
The Arabic words "ana" and "khalas" are doing overtime.
"ana" = I am and becomes "I am my" in the last two instances. "Khalas" stands on its own line in the first instance -- open to many translations: "enough," "stop," or "no more" and establishes its commitment to finality in that last line, "khalas all this breaking."
MORE! Solmaz Sharif’s β€œPersian Letters”
poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine…
Here the vernacular β€œbar bar bar” not only shows us the creation of a word: β€œbarbarians” -- it holds a mirror up to the ones who made it.

β€œWe make them reveal
the brutes they are, Aleph, by the things
we make them name.” - @nsabugsme
NOW Baldwin: β€œPeople evolve a language in order to describe and thus control their circumstances, or in order not to be submerged by a reality that they cannot articulate. (And, if they cannot articulate it, they are submerged.)”
"Black English is the creation of the black diaspora. Blacks came to the United States chained to each other, but from different tribes: Neither could speak the other's language. If two black people, at that bitter hour of the world's history, had been able to speak to each...
other, the institution of chattel slavery could never have lasted as long as it did. Subsequently, the slave was given, under the eye, and the gun, of his master, Congo Square, and the Bible--or in other words, and under these conditions, the slave began the formation of the
black church, and it is within this unprecedented tabernacle that black English began to be formed. This was not, merely, as in the European example, the adoption of a foreign tongue, but an alchemy that transformed ancient elements into a new language:
A language comes into existence by means of brutal necessity, and the rules of the language are dictated by what the language must convey.
Link to the full essay: β€œIf Black English Isn’t a Language, Then Tell Me, What Is?” James Baldwin archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.co…
Further reading: β€œMother Tongue” by Amy Tan
Link: …periencefall2013.qwriting.qc.cuny.edu/files/2013/09/…
I leave you with this poem by @kyle_decoy β€œAmerican Vernacular” via @LambdaLiterary lambdaliterary.org/features/poetr…
Thanks for following along. Please support @nomadreadings NOMADxNOLA here:

Happy creating. Follow @nomadreadingsgofundme.com/nomadxnola

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